Got my wave invite this morning ( thx @jeffl8n ).
As soon a I logged in I checked out the first 'wave'.
Google embedded a youtube video of a guy explaining how to use wave.
It's nothing fancy (just 2 mins) but I think it is a good example of how eLearning doesn't have to by long and complex to make its point and keep users interested.
I made a screenr of it for you:

In the Articulate Forums Squid asks: "I'm using a kiosk that has the toolbar locked down to prevent internet surfing. Is there a way to print to a network printer without a print icon?"
Basically all that needs to be done is to create a button with a hyperlink to javascript:window.print();
I created a quick screenr to demo it.

My friend Greg got a new HD cam a few months ago and we've been itching to shoot something.
We decided to do a cooking show spoof. We both loving cooking too...
Our wives graciously volunteered to star as our chefs.
We shot the whole thing in about 2 hours and hope to edit it this week.
So maybe this weekend we will have a Grand Opening!
Here are a few seconds of video I took with my phone.

I wanted to offer a 'lighter' theme for mobile visitors so I tried out the Mobile Tools module http://drupal.org/project/mobile_tools
I got it to work for me after I made some customizations.

It is very good module that has a lot of options...
The method that appealed to me the most was an option to display a block asking the user if they would like to switch. It even detects if its a mobile user browsing the desktop version. That way you don't have to have the block up all the time.

I like all the items mentioned in the title.
I use the drupal twitter module to send tweets when I add content to my site. I use pixelpipe to send content to my site from my android phone via drupal's blogapi module.
Unfortunatly the blogapi module does not trigger the twitter module.
One work around is using the actions/trigger module but that doesnt pipe the URL though tinyurl first.
Here is my solution.
I altered the twitter_actions.module so that it automagicly converts the url (using existing code)